Nog even een opmerking : De link die je meestuurde daar vond ik het volgend e :
Using Apache
You can access apache by typing blockedcontent or http://blockedcontent (by default it will be listening on port 80) in your browser address bar. [color=red:009e66ca7a]By default the directory for apache server pages is /var/www [/color:009e66ca7a]. It needs root access in order to put files in. A way to do it is just starting the file browser as root in a terminal:
Kijk, hier saat dus de deafult, maar waar pas ik nu dit aan?

Nog even een opmerking : De link die je meestuurde daar vond ik het volgend e :
Using Apache
You can access apache by typing blockedcontent or http://blockedcontent (by default it will be listening on port 80) in your browser address bar. [color=red:53ef04eeb4]By default the directory for apache server pages is /var/www [/color:53ef04eeb4]. It needs root access in order to put files in. A way to do it is just starting the file browser as root in a terminal:
Kijk, hier saat dus de deafult, maar waar pas ik nu dit aan?

[quote:11f4d915ae="daf_driver"]Nog even een opmerking : De link die je meestuurde daar vond ik het volgend e :
Using Apache
You can access apache by typing blockedcontent or http://blockedcontent (by default it will be listening on port 80) in your browser address bar. [color=red:11f4d915ae]By default the directory for apache server pages is /var/www [/color:11f4d915ae]. It needs root access in order to put files in. A way to do it is just starting the file browser as root in a terminal:
Kijk, hier saat dus de deafult, maar waar pas ik nu dit aan?[/quote:11f4d915ae]
Aan het begin van de pagina staat het volgende:
[quote:11f4d915ae]
Virtual Hosts
Apache2 has the concept of sites, which are separate configuration files that Apache2 will read. These are available in /etc/apache2/sites-available. By default, there is one site available called default this is what you will see when you browse to [WWW] http://localhost or [WWW] http://127.0.0.1. You can have many different site configurations available, and activate only those that you need.
As an example, we want the default site to be /home/user/public_html/. To do this, we must create a new site and then enable it in Apache2.
To create a new site:
* Copy the default website as a starting point. sudo cp /etc/apache2/sites-available/default /etc/apache2/sites-available/mysite
* Edit the new configuration file in a text editor &quot;sudo nano&quot; on the command line or &quot;gksudo gedit&quot;, for example: gksudo gedit /etc/apache2/sites-available/mysite
* Change the DocumentRoot to point to the new location. For example, /home/user/public_html/
* Change the Directory directive, replace &lt;Directory /var/www/&gt; to &lt;Directory /home/user/public_html/
* You can also set separate logs for each site. To do this, change the ErrorLog and CustomLog directives. This is optional, but handy if you have many sites
* Save the file
Now, we must deactivate the old site, and activate our new one. Ubuntu provides two small utilities that take care of this: a2ensite (apache2enable site) and a2dissite (apache2disable site).
sudo a2dissite default &amp;&amp; sudo a2ensite mysite
Finally, we restart Apache2:
sudo /etc/init.d/apache2 restart
[/quote:11f4d915ae]
Oh ja, en ik gebruik ook Ubuntu (Gutsy)